Critics pile pressure on new PM

Handbook, shares to become scrutinised

Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is about to make a speech after receiving royal endorsement for her prime ministerial position in Bangkok on Sunday. (Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)
After receiving aristocratic support for her prime ministerial position in Bangkok on Sunday, Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is scheduled to address a conversation. ( Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)

Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and Pheu Thai’s electronic wallet system have been subject to scrutiny over her stock in a business that purchased a contentious religious narrative in Pathum Thani, which also houses the Alpine Golf Club and a residential complex.

A number of organizations were contacting many independent government organizations on Instagram on Monday to request that their organizations be looked into the problems the day after Ms. Paetongtarn takes the oath of office from His Majesty the King, according to Suwit Thongprasert, an activist who was formerly known as Phra Buddha Isara.

” Pheu Thai had promised that the 10, 000-baht]digital budget flyer ] would be rapidly distributed without the need to borrow money. Nearly one year has passed, and the public has yet to get a second baht from the scheme”, he said.

The National Anti-Corruption Commission ( NACC ) had earlier warned the government against carrying out the scheme, citing various legal pitfalls and the possibility of graft.

Former assistant spokesman for the Democratic Party Chao Meekhuad also spoke out about the Pathum Thani property dispute, calling on Ms. Paetongtarn to give the controversial property back to the temple to avoid any legal turbulence that might put her in danger of winning the election.

The terrain in Pathum Thani’s Klong Luang city was donated by a lady, Noem Chamnanchartsakda, to Wat Dhammamikaramvoraviharn in Prachuap Khiri Khan again in 1971.

After her dying, the Mahamongkut Ratchawittayalai Foundation, which was appointed as the trustee of her house, sold the land to Alpine Real Estate and Alpine Golf and Sports Club, of which Ms Paetongtarn is a shareholder.

In 2017, the Central Criminal Court for Corruption and Misconduct cases found that Yongyuth Wichaidit, who had previously served as acting continuous secretary for the decor in 2002, abused his position by allowing the purchase of religious land to make way for the Alpine Golf Club.

The Appeal Court upheld a two-year jail word handed down by the lower court in 2019. The Appeal Court rejected his demand to challenge the decision in 2020.

The NACC, which conducted the sale investigation, found Yongyuth guilty of revoked a Land Department attempt that revoked the price of Alpine Real Estate Co.

Because the price was religious land, the Council of State ordered property officials to renounce the agreement, which led to the cancellation of the deal.